Russell Simmons Defends Prepaid Credit Cards
Russell Simmons Defends Prepaid Credit Cards · Daily Ticker

Editors Note: Prepaid cards are big business. As consumer use of credit cards has dipped in the past few years, the use of debit and especially prepaid cards has risen. In fact, one in three American households used a prepaid card in 2009, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. They are definitely mainstream financial products these days and many banks have jumped into the prepaid card market.

How do they work? A consumer signs up, adds money to the account and then uses it just like they would a credit card. And of course, just like credit cards, there are fees. Some cards have more than others and that’s where controversy has arisen over the years.

Hip-hop mogul and entrepreneur Russell Simmons got into the business with the RushCard 10 years ago. He insists his card and other prepaid cards have gotten a bad rap. So we invited him to write a guest column for The Daily Ticker. Read on...


By Russell Simmons

Prepaid cards have come a long way since the ill-fated Kardashian card – an exorbitantly priced prepaid card that was pulled from the market in 2010 less than a month after its launch. Yet, the industry is still suffering from its ripple effect. A serious and flagrant discrepancy exists between the way mainstream media reports on the prepaid industry and the way the industry should be represented.

Unfortunately, this is not the first time I’m fighting this battle. All too often, the prepaid card industry is hit with under-researched, unverified stories that do little more than leverage celebrity names for clicks and website traffic.

So here’s the real story: Over the past few years, there’s been a collective effort across the prepaid industry that has yielded reduced fees, increased transparency, and innovative products that fairly and honestly serve the millions of Americans who are looking for an alternative to a traditional banking relationship, or feel cut off from the economy because they have been turned away by the big banks. RushCard has been at the forefront of this movement for over 10 years.

And let me be clear on this point: I am not a celebrity endorser. I founded RushCard and have invested millions of my own money to help bring prepaid to life, shouldering much of the learning curve for the industry over the past decade. We’ve worked closely in cooperation with regulators, advocates, prepaid companies and policy makers to develop innovative financial products that are suitable for those not welcomed by traditional banks.

Don’t just take my word for it when I say prepaid is a valuable and legitimate tool for those seeking to be part of the economic mainstream; Consumers Union, the nation’s consumer rights watchdog and publisher of the influential Consumer Reports magazine, recently released a study on prepaid cards that states: